The point is that the item in question was not faulty by Apple's hand nor was the item recalled by Apple. Therefore the relation is that the instance you cited in an earlier post is invalid. Following that, your example is no longer a substantiation of your comment. So if you want to re-enforce your comment you need a better (and hopefully valid) example.

Clear enough?

David

On Jan 31, 2004, at 8:11 PM, Robin Ashe wrote:

On 1/31/04 5:48 PM, "Kyle Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On 1/31/04 8:35 PM, "Robin Ashe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Spew into the
Cybertrough:

On 1/31/04 3:28 PM, "David M. Ensteness" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

But, as has been said, when Dell screws up, no
one cares.

I don't buy that. I think it's more likely that Mac users don't care or like
to think that PC users put up with crap so that they can feel better about
themselves.

No, actually, there have been no proven fires from those power adapters.
None. It's a myth. The manufacturer that sold them to Apple was the one
who initiated the recall. I know, because at that time I was working for
Apple in RD&D.


I don't see how that response relates to my comment.


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